/* Private partial symbol table definitions. Copyright (C) 2009-2015 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This file is part of GDB. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */ #ifndef PSYMPRIV_H #define PSYMPRIV_H #include "psymtab.h" struct psymbol_allocation_list; /* A partial_symbol records the name, domain, and address class of symbols whose types we have not parsed yet. For functions, it also contains their memory address, so we can find them from a PC value. Each partial_symbol sits in a partial_symtab, all of which are chained on a partial symtab list and which points to the corresponding normal symtab once the partial_symtab has been referenced. */ /* This structure is space critical. See space comments at the top of symtab.h. */ struct partial_symbol { /* The general symbol info required for all types of symbols. */ struct general_symbol_info ginfo; /* Name space code. */ ENUM_BITFIELD(domain_enum_tag) domain : 6; /* Address class (for info_symbols). Note that we don't allow synthetic "aclass" values here at present, simply because there's no need. */ ENUM_BITFIELD(address_class) aclass : 6; }; #define PSYMBOL_DOMAIN(psymbol) (psymbol)->domain #define PSYMBOL_CLASS(psymbol) (psymbol)->aclass /* A convenience enum to give names to some constants used when searching psymtabs. This is internal to psymtab and should not be used elsewhere. */ enum psymtab_search_status { PST_NOT_SEARCHED, PST_SEARCHED_AND_FOUND, PST_SEARCHED_AND_NOT_FOUND }; /* Each source file that has not been fully read in is represented by a partial_symtab. This contains the information on where in the executable the debugging symbols for a specific file are, and a list of names of global symbols which are located in this file. They are all chained on partial symtab lists. Even after the source file has been read into a symtab, the partial_symtab remains around. They are allocated on an obstack, objfile_obstack. */ struct partial_symtab { /* Chain of all existing partial symtabs. */ struct partial_symtab *next; /* Name of the source file which this partial_symtab defines, or if the psymtab is anonymous then a descriptive name for debugging purposes, or "". It must not be NULL. */ const char *filename; /* Full path of the source file. NULL if not known. */ char *fullname; /* Directory in which it was compiled, or NULL if we don't know. */ const char *dirname; /* Range of text addresses covered by this file; texthigh is the beginning of the next section. Do not use if PSYMTABS_ADDRMAP_SUPPORTED is set. */ CORE_ADDR textlow; CORE_ADDR texthigh; /* If NULL, this is an ordinary partial symbol table. If non-NULL, this holds a single includer of this partial symbol table, and this partial symbol table is a shared one. A shared psymtab is one that is referenced by multiple other psymtabs, and which conceptually has its contents directly included in those. Shared psymtabs have special semantics. When a search finds a symbol in a shared table, we instead return one of the non-shared tables that include this one. A shared psymtabs can be referred to by other shared ones. The psymtabs that refer to a shared psymtab will list the shared psymtab in their 'dependencies' array. In DWARF terms, a shared psymtab is a DW_TAG_partial_unit; but of course using a name based on that would be too confusing, so "shared" was chosen instead. Only a single user is needed because, when expanding a shared psymtab, we only need to expand its "canonical" non-shared user. The choice of which one should be canonical is left to the debuginfo reader; it can be arbitrary. */ struct partial_symtab *user; /* Array of pointers to all of the partial_symtab's which this one depends on. Since this array can only be set to previous or the current (?) psymtab, this dependency tree is guaranteed not to have any loops. "depends on" means that symbols must be read for the dependencies before being read for this psymtab; this is for type references in stabs, where if foo.c includes foo.h, declarations in foo.h may use type numbers defined in foo.c. For other debugging formats there may be no need to use dependencies. */ struct partial_symtab **dependencies; int number_of_dependencies; /* Global symbol list. This list will be sorted after readin to improve access. Binary search will be the usual method of finding a symbol within it. globals_offset is an integer offset within global_psymbols[]. */ int globals_offset; int n_global_syms; /* Static symbol list. This list will *not* be sorted after readin; to find a symbol in it, exhaustive search must be used. This is reasonable because searches through this list will eventually lead to either the read in of a files symbols for real (assumed to take a *lot* of time; check) or an error (and we don't care how long errors take). This is an offset and size within static_psymbols[]. */ int statics_offset; int n_static_syms; /* Non-zero if the symtab corresponding to this psymtab has been readin. This is located here so that this structure packs better on 64-bit systems. */ unsigned char readin; /* True iff objfile->psymtabs_addrmap is properly populated for this partial_symtab. For discontiguous overlapping psymtabs is the only usable info in PSYMTABS_ADDRMAP. */ unsigned char psymtabs_addrmap_supported; /* True if the name of this partial symtab is not a source file name. */ unsigned char anonymous; /* A flag that is temporarily used when searching psymtabs. */ ENUM_BITFIELD (psymtab_search_status) searched_flag : 2; /* Pointer to compunit eventually allocated for this source file, 0 if !readin or if we haven't looked for the symtab after it was readin. */ struct compunit_symtab *compunit_symtab; /* Pointer to function which will read in the symtab corresponding to this psymtab. */ void (*read_symtab) (struct partial_symtab *, struct objfile *); /* Information that lets read_symtab() locate the part of the symbol table that this psymtab corresponds to. This information is private to the format-dependent symbol reading routines. For further detail examine the various symbol reading modules. */ void *read_symtab_private; }; extern void sort_pst_symbols (struct objfile *, struct partial_symtab *); /* Add any kind of symbol to a psymbol_allocation_list. */ extern void add_psymbol_to_list (const char *, int, int, domain_enum, enum address_class, struct psymbol_allocation_list *, long, CORE_ADDR, enum language, struct objfile *); extern void init_psymbol_list (struct objfile *, int); extern struct partial_symtab *start_psymtab_common (struct objfile *, const char *, CORE_ADDR, struct partial_symbol **, struct partial_symbol **); extern struct partial_symtab *allocate_psymtab (const char *, struct objfile *) ATTRIBUTE_NONNULL (1); extern void discard_psymtab (struct objfile *, struct partial_symtab *); extern struct cleanup *make_cleanup_discard_psymtabs (struct objfile *); /* Traverse all psymtabs in one objfile. */ #define ALL_OBJFILE_PSYMTABS(objfile, p) \ for ((p) = (objfile) -> psymtabs; (p) != NULL; (p) = (p) -> next) #endif /* PSYMPRIV_H */